Verse 1-2
Hebrews 6:1-2. Therefore —
Seeing that most of you have
continued so ignorant, although
you have been so long favoured
with the light of the gospel,
and various means of
edification, it is high time for
you to labour for more knowledge
and grace, and for me to
instruct you further; leaving
the principles of the doctrine
of Christ — That is, saying no
more for the present, of those
things in which those who
embrace Christianity are wont to
be first instructed. The
original expression, τον της
αρχης του χριστου λογον, is,
literally, the word of the
beginning of Christ, as in the
margin; and signifies those
parts of the Christian doctrine
which men were usually and
properly first instructed in;
and which the apostle
immediately enumerates. They are
the same with the first
principles of the oracles of
God, mentioned Hebrews 5:12. But
it must be observed that the
signification of the words must
be limited to the present
occasion; for if we consider the
things here spoken of
absolutely, they are never to be
left, either by teachers or
hearers. There is a necessity
that teachers should often
insist on the rudiments, or
first principles, of religion;
not only with respect to them
who are continually to be
trained up in knowledge from
their infancy, but also those
who have made a further progress
in knowledge. And this course we
find our apostle to have
followed in all his epistles.
Nor are any hearers so to leave
these principles, as to forget
them, or not duly to make use of
them. Cast aside a constant
regard to them, in their proper
place, and no progress can be
made in knowledge, no more than
a building can be carried on
when the foundation is taken
away.
Let us go on unto perfection —
Unto a perfect acquaintance with
the more sublime and difficult
truths, and the high privileges
and duties of Christianity; not
laying again — What has been
laid already; the foundation of
repentance from dead works —
That is, from the works done by
those who are dead in sin, or
who, through sin, are under
condemnation to the second
death, are alienated from the
life of God, and carnally
minded, which is death, Romans
8:6. See note on Ephesians
2:1-2. Not only are known and
wilful sins, which proceed from
spiritual death, and if not
pardoned and taken away, end in
death eternal, here intended;
but even all works, though
apparently moral, charitable,
and pious, are but dead works,
before the living God, if they
do not proceed from spiritual
life in the soul, or from living
faith, even the faith which
worketh by love, (Galatians 5:6;
1 Corinthians 13:3,) as their
principle, and be not directed
to the glory of God as their
end.
And faith toward God — Looking
to, and confiding in him for
pardon, holiness, and eternal
life, through Christ. Of the
doctrine of baptisms — The
apostle does not speak of the
legal washings in use among the
Jews, whether by immersion,
ablution, or sprinkling; (for
why should those who believed in
Christ be instructed concerning
these?) but John’s baptism and
that of Christ, which were
distinct from each other, and
were subjects of disputation
with many among the Jews, Mark
7:3-4; John 3:22-26. John
admitted the penitent to the
baptism of water; and, in
obedience to the command of
Christ, (Matthew 28:19,) the
apostles baptized all that
professed to believe in him, in
the name of the Father, and of
the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.
Or, as Whitby thinks, the
apostle is here to be understood
of the double baptism “of which
John spake, when he said, I
baptize you with water, but he
that cometh after me shall
baptize you with the Holy Ghost
and with fire, Matthew 3:11; and
of which Christ spake to
Nicodemus, (John 3:5,) saying,
Except a man be born again of
water and of the Spirit, he
cannot enter into the kingdom of
God. For this, in order,
followed the doctrine of
repentance, and of faith in God
and our Lord Jesus Christ.”
And the laying on of hands — The
imposition of hands was used by
the apostles and first Christian
ministers in the healing of
diseases, and in setting persons
apart for the work of the
ministry; but neither of these
were common to all Christians,
nor joined with baptism; nor
were they reckoned among the
principles of the doctrine of
Christ, or the initiatory
doctrines of the Christian
faith. We must therefore
understand this of that
imposition of the apostles’
hands which was wont to be used,
after baptism, to confer upon
the persons baptized the
extraordinary gifts of the Holy
Ghost. See Acts 8:14-17; Acts
19:6. And this was a matter
wherein the glory of the gospel
and its propagation were highly
concerned; indeed, next to the
preaching of the word, it was
the great means used by God for
bringing both Jews and Gentiles
over to the faith of the gospel,
or for establishing them
therein.
And the resurrection of the dead
— Namely, of the bodies of the
dead; and of eternal judgment —
The future and general judgment,
called eternal, because the
sentence then pronounced will be
irreversible, and the effects of
it remain for ever. In which two
last-mentioned articles, the
penitent and believing, that had
been admitted to baptism, were
more fully instructed, as being
most powerful motives to engage
them herein to exercise
themselves to have always
consciences void of offence
toward God and toward all men.
“Interpreters observe,” says
Whitby, “that the doctrine of
Origen, touching the period of
the torments of the damned, is
here condemned; and indeed the
primitive father’s not Origen
himself excepted, taught the
contrary. ‘If we do not the will
of Christ,’ says Clemens Romanus,
‘nothing will deliver us from
eternal punishment.’ ‘The
punishment of the damned,’ says
Justin Martyr, ‘is endless
punishment and torment in
eternal fire.’ In Theophilus it
is, ‘eternal punishment.’
Irenĉus, in his symbol of faith,
makes this one article, ‘that
God would send the ungodly and
unjust into everlasting fire.’
Tertullian declares, ‘that all
men are appointed to torment or
refreshment, both eternal.’ And
‘if any man,’ says he, ‘thinks
the wicked are to be consumed
and not punished, let him
remember that hell-fire is
styled eternal, because designed
for eternal punishment; and
their substance will remain for
ever whose punishment doth so.’
St. Cyprian says, ‘The souls of
the wicked are kept with their
bodies to be grieved with
endless torments.’ ‘There is no
measure nor end of their
torments,’ says Minutius.
Lastly, Origen reckons this
among the doctrines defined by
the church; ‘That every soul,
when it goes out of this world,
shall either enjoy the
inheritance of eternal life and
bliss, if its deeds have
rendered it fit for bliss; or be
delivered up to eternal fire and
punishment, if its sins have
deserved that state.’”
Verses 3-5
Hebrews 6:3-5. And this we will
do — We will go on to
perfection; if God permit — That
is, afford assistance and
opportunity. And we will do this
the rather, and the more
diligently, because it is
impossible for those who were
once enlightened — With the
knowledge of the truth as it is
in Jesus, (Ephesians 4:21,) and
have been made free thereby from
the bondage of sin and Satan,
John 8:31-36; and have tasted
the heavenly gift — The gift of
righteousness imputed to them,
Romans 5:17; faith counted for
righteousness; or the remission
of sins through faith in Christ,
sweeter than honey to the taste;
and have been made partakers of
the Holy Ghost — Of the witness
and fruits of the Spirit of God;
and have tasted the good word of
God — Have had a relish for and
delight in the doctrine of the
gospel, have fed upon it, and
been nourished by it; and the
powers of the world to come —
΄ελλοντος αιωνος, of the future
age, as the Christian
dispensation was termed by the
Jews, the Messiah being called
by the LXX. in their
interpretation of Isaiah 9:6,
(instead of the everlasting
Father, which is our translation
of the clause,) πατηρ του
μελλοντος αιωνος, the Father of
the age to come. If the
expression be thus taken, by the
powers, here spoken of, we are
to understand the privileges and
blessings of the gospel
dispensation in general,
including, at least with regard
to some, the miraculous gifts
conferred on many of the first
Christians. But as the future
state, or future world, may be
meant, the expression may be
understood of those earnests and
anticipations of future felicity
which every one tastes who has a
hope full of immortality. “Every
child that is naturally born,
first sees the light, then
receives and tastes proper
nourishment, and partakes of the
things of this world. In like
manner the apostle, comparing
spiritual with natural things,
speaks of one born of the Spirit
as seeing the light, tasting the
sweetness, and partaking of the
things of the world to come.” —
Wesley.
Verse 6
Hebrews 6:6. If they fall away —
Literally, and have fallen away.
The preceding participles,
φωτισθεντας, γευσαμενους, and
γενηθεντας, being aorists, says
Macknight, “are rightly rendered
by our translators in the past
time; who were enlightened, have
tasted, were made partakers;
wherefore παραπεσοντας, being
also an aorist, ought to have
been translated in the past
time, have fallen away.
Nevertheless our translators,
(following Beza, who, without
any authority from ancient MSS.,
has inserted in his version the
word si, if,) have rendered this
clause, if they fall away; that
this text might not appear to
contradict the doctrine of the
perseverance of the saints. But
as no translator should take
upon him to add to, or alter the
Scriptures, for the sake of any
favourite doctrine, I have
translated the word in the past
time, have fallen away,
according to its true import, as
standing in connection with the
other aorists in the preceding
verses.” “Two things,” says
Pierce, “are here to be
observed: 1st, That he speaks of
such only as fell away from the
very profession of Christianity.
This appears from what he
presently adds, to set forth the
aggravations of their guilt,
that they crucify to themselves
the Son of God afresh, and put
him to open shame” — That is,
show themselves to be of the
same mind with those that did
crucify him, and would do it
again were it in their power;
and do all they can to make him
contemptible and despised. “It
is therefore very unreasonable
for persons to give way to
despair themselves, or to drive
others to it, by applying to
other sins this text, which only
relates to total apostacy. 2d,
As the same thing is spoken of
again, Hebrews 10:26, &c., it
cannot be improper to compare
the two places together, in
order to our fully understanding
his design. And therefore, from
the other place, I would explain
this, If they shall, εκουσιως,
wilfully, fall away. But it may
be inquired why our author
speaks so severely of the
condition of such apostates. Now
the reason of this may be taken
partly from the nature of the
evidence which they rejected.
The fullest and clearest
evidence which God ever designed
to give of the truth of
Christianity, was these
miraculous operations of the
Spirit; and when men were not
only eye-witnesses of these
miracles, but were likewise
themselves (probably) empowered
by the Spirit to work them, and
yet after all rejected this
evidence, they could have no
further or higher evidence
whereby they should be
convinced; so that their case
must, in that respect, appear
desperate. This may be partly
owing to their putting
themselves out of the way of
conviction. If they could not
see enough to settle them in the
Christian religion, while they
made a profession of it, much
less were they like to meet with
any thing new to convince and
reclaim them, when they had
taken up an opposite profession,
and joined themselves with the
inveterate enemies of
Christianity. And finally, this
may be resolved into the
righteous judgment of God
against such men for the heinous
and aggravated wickedness of
which they are guilty.”
Verse 7-8
Hebrews 6:7-8. For the earth
which drinketh in the rain, &c.
— Thus they to whom the gospel
is preached, and who believe and
embrace it, bring forth the
fruits of repentance, faith, and
new obedience, and are accepted
and blessed by God with further
measures of grace, according to
Matthew 13:12; Matthew 25:29,
where see the notes. But that
which beareth thorns and briers
— Only or chiefly; is rejected —
No more labour is bestowed upon
it; and is nigh unto cursing —
As in the blessing mentioned in
the former verse, there is an
allusion to the primitive
blessing, whereby the earth was
rendered fruitful, Genesis 1:11;
so in the curse, here mentioned,
there is an allusion to the
curse pronounced on the earth
after the fall, Genesis 3:17.
Whose end is to be burned — A
principal part of the eastern
agriculture consists in leading
rills of water from ponds,
fountains, and brooks to render
the fields fruitful. When this
is neglected, the land is
scorched by the heat and drought
of the climate, and so, being
burned up, is altogether
sterile. Or, he may refer to the
custom of husbandmen’s burning
up the thorns and briers
produced by barren ground. The
apostle’s meaning is, that as
land, which is unfruitful under
every method of culture, will at
length be deserted by the
husbandmen, and burned up with
drought; so those that enjoy the
means of grace, and yet bring
forth nothing but evil tempers,
words, and works, must expect to
be deprived of the means they
enjoy, and exposed to utter
ruin. And the apostle
particularly referred in these
words to the Jewish nation, the
generality of whom rejected the
gospel, while many others, who
had received it, apostatized
from it; and who therefore, in a
peculiar sense, were exposed to
the divine malediction, as was
signified by Christ’s cursing
the barren fig-tree, mentioned
Mark 11:13; Mark 11:20. The
consequence of which was the
burning of their city and
temple, and the slaughter of
many hundreds of thousands of
them shortly after this epistle
was written, together with the
awful state of spiritual
barrenness in which the remnant
of them have long lain.
Verses 9-11
Hebrews 6:9-11. But, beloved —
In this one place he calls them
so. He never uses this
appellation but in exhorting; we
are persuaded better things of
you — Than those intimated
verges 4-6. This is exactly in
St. Paul’s manner of softening
the harsh things he found
himself obliged to write. See
Ephesians 4:20; 2 Thessalonians
2:13. And things that accompany
salvation — Which argue you to
be in a state of salvation, and
will in the end, if you
persevere, bring you to eternal
salvation; namely, sincere faith
in Christ and his gospel, love
to God and one another, and
obedience to his will; though we
thus speak — Declare the danger
of apostacy to warn you, lest
you should fall from your
present steadfastness. For God
is not unrighteous to forget,
&c. — You give plain proof of
your faith and love, which the
righteous God will surely
reward; and, or rather, but, we
desire that every one of you do
continue to show the same
diligence — Which you have used
hitherto; and therefore we thus
speak; to the full assurance of
hope — That you may be fully
confirmed in your hope of
eternal felicity; unto the end —
As long as you live; which you
cannot expect if you abate of
your diligence. “The full
assurance of faith relates to
present pardon, the full
assurance of hope to future
glory. The former is the highest
degree of divine evidence that
God is reconciled to us in the
Son of his love: the latter is
the same degree of divine
evidence (wrought in the soul by
the same immediate inspiration
of the Holy Ghost) of
persevering grace, and of
eternal glory. So much, and no
more, as faith every moment
beholds with open face, so much
does hope see, to all eternity.
But this assurance of faith and
hope is not an opinion, not a
bare construction of Scripture,
but is given immediately by the
power of the Holy Ghost; and
what none can have for another,
but for himself only.” — Wesley.
Verse 12
Hebrews 6:12. That ye be not
slothful — νωθροι, careless and
negligent, or dull, sluggish,
and indolent, namely, in the use
of the means of grace, or in
those works of piety and virtue
which are the proper fruits of
faith and love; but followers —
μιμηται, imitators; of them who
through faith — In God, and in
the truths and promises of his
holy word; and patience — Or,
long-suffering, as ΄ακροθυμιας
rather signifies, enduring long
in the constant exercise of
faith, hope, and love,
notwithstanding any or all
opposition, and the bearing all
trials and troubles, of whatever
kind, with composure of mind and
resignation to the divine will;
inherit the promises — Dr.
Whitby would render it,
inherited the promises,
supposing that the expression
refers to the promises made to
Abraham and the other patriarchs
respecting the multiplication of
their seed, their being put in
possession of Canaan, and the
various other promises made to
them, the accomplishment of
which they afterward received.
But the participle,
κληρονομουντων, being in the
present tense, will hardly bear
to be so rendered, signifying
literally, are inheriting,
namely, the promises. Pierce and
Macknight, therefore, understand
it of the believing Gentiles,
who at the time when the apostle
wrote were inheriting those
promises made to Abraham
concerning all nations of the
earth being blessed in him and
his seed. But, as Dr. Doddridge
observes, if this were intended
as a hint to stir up the Jews to
emulation, as is supposed, “it
was indeed a very obscure one;
for, comparatively, it is a low
sense in which Christians, in
this imperfect state, can be
said to inherit the promises. It
seems rather to refer to all
good men, who were departed out
of our world, whether in former
or latter days, and under
whatever dispensation they died.
Taking it in this view, it is a
conclusive argument against the
soul’s continuing in a state of
sleep during the intermediate
period between death and the
resurrection.” This certainly
seems the most natural
interpretation of the verse,
namely, that “the apostle meant
to lead his readers to meditate
on the happiness of Abraham,
Moses, Joshua, Job, and all
those who had on earth lived by
faith in the promises of God,
especially the great promise of
a Saviour, and eternal salvation
by him; and had patiently
waited, laboured, and suffered
in the obedience of faith; and
in consequence were at the time,
when the apostle wrote this,
inheriting the promises of God,
of eternal blessings, through
Christ, to all believers.” —
Scott.
Verses 13-15
Hebrews 6:13-15. For when God
made promise, &c. — As if he had
said, And it appears that this
is the way to partake of mercies
promised, because Abraham was
obliged to exercise faith and
long-suffering before he
obtained the accomplishment of
the promise made to him. The
promise here referred to, is
that which God made to Abraham
after he had laid Isaac on the
altar, Genesis 22:16-17. For on
no other occasion did God
confirm any promise to Abraham
with an oath. To Abraham — Whose
spiritual as well as natural
seed you believing Hebrews are,
and therefore shall partake of
the same promises and blessings
which were ensured to him.
Because he could swear by no
greater person, he sware by
himself — By his own sacred and
divine name; saying, Surely
blessing I will bless thee — And
all believers in thee; and
multiplying I will multiply thee
— Both thy natural and thy
spiritual seed. The apostle
quotes only the first words of
the oath; but his reasoning is
founded on the whole; and
particularly on the promise,
(Genesis 22:18,) And in thy seed
all the nations of the earth
shall be blessed. They shall be
blessed by having their faith
counted to them for
righteousness, through thy seed,
Christ. And so after he had
patiently endured —
΄ακροθυμησας, after he had
waited, or suffered long: he
waited about thirty years before
Isaac was born, after he was
promised; he obtained the
promise — Here, by a usual
figure of speech, the promise is
put for the thing promised. “In
the birth of Isaac, Abraham
obtained the beginning of the
accomplishment of God’s promise
concerning his numerous natural
progeny. Moreover, as the birth
of Isaac was brought about
supernaturally by the divine
power, it was both a proof and a
pledge of the accomplishment of
the promise concerning the birth
of his numerous spiritual seed.
Wherefore, in the birth of
Isaac, Abraham may truly be said
to have obtained the
accomplishment of the promise
concerning his numerous
spiritual seed likewise. In any
other sense, Abraham did not
obtain the accomplishment of
that promise.”
Verse 16-17
Hebrews 6:16-17. For men verily
swear by the greater — By
persons greater than themselves,
whose vengeance they imprecate
if they swear falsely; and
particularly by Him who is
infinitely greater than
themselves; and an oath for
confirmation — To confirm what
is promised or asserted; is to
them an end of all strife —
πασης αντιλογιας περας, usually
puts an end to all
contradiction. This shows that
an oath taken in a religious
manner, is lawful, even under
the gospel: otherwise the
apostle would never have
mentioned it with so much
honour, as a proper means to
confirm the truth. Wherein — In
which business of confirming his
promise; God, willing more
abundantly — Beyond what was
absolutely necessary, and out of
his superabundant love to and
care for us; to show unto the
heirs of promise — To Abraham’s
spiritual seed, whose faith is
counted for righteousness, and
who partake of the blessings
promised; the immutability of
his counsel — Of his purpose,
which is accompanied with
infinite wisdom; confirmed it —
Greek, εμεσιτευσεν, interposed,
or came between the making of
the promise and its
accomplishment. The expression,
says Macknight, “literally
signifies, he mediatored it with
an oath: he made an oath, the
mediator, surety, or ratifier of
his counsel.” This sense of the
word merits attention, because
it suggests a fine
interpretation of Hebrews 9:15,
where see the note. What amazing
condescension was this of God!
He, who is greatest of all, acts
as if he were a middle person;
as if, while he swears, he were
less than himself, by whom he
swears.
Verse 18-19
Hebrews 6:18-19. That by two
immutable things in either, much
more in both, of which it was
impossible for God to lie — To
alter his purpose and disappoint
our expectation; we might have a
strong consolation — A powerful
argument to believe the promise
with a confidence excluding all
doubt and fear, and might
receive a great comfort thereby;
who have fled for refuge — Who,
under a consciousness of our
sinfulness and guilt, depravity,
weakness, and wretchedness, have
betaken ourselves for safety
from deserved wrath; to lay hold
on the hope — The promise (so
confirmed by an oath) which is
the ground of our hope; set
before us in Christ — Through
whom alone we can have
salvation, present and eternal;
which hope — In and through
Christ, our righteousness and
sanctification; we have as an
anchor of the soul — The apostle
here alludes to an anchor, which
when cast, both preserves the
vessel from losing the ground
she has gained, and keeps her
steady amid the winds and waves,
when the art and skill of the
mariners are overcome, and they
cannot steer the ship in its
right course, nor could
otherwise preserve it from
rocks, shelves, or sand- banks;
both sure — ασφαλη, safe, that
will not fail, or may with
confidence be trusted to, the
matter of which it is formed
being solid, and the proportion
of it suited to the burden of
the ship; and steadfast —
βεβαιαν, firm against all
opposition, which no violence of
winds or storms can either break
or move from its hold; and which
entereth into that within the
veil — He alludes to the veil
which divided the holy place of
the Jewish tabernacle or temple
from the most holy: and thus he
slides back to the priesthood of
Christ. But he does not speak of
that which was within the veil,
namely, the ark and mercy-seat,
the tables of stone, and
cherubim, the work of men’s
hands, but of the things
signified by them; God himself
on a throne of grace, and the
Lord Christ, as the high-priest
of the church, at his right
hand: or the Father as the
author, the Lord Jesus as the
purchaser, and the covenant as
the conveyer of all grace; which
were all typically represented
by the things within the veil.
And the apostle makes use of
this allusion to instruct the
Hebrews in the nature and use of
the old tabernacle institutions;
and from thence in the true
nature of the priesthood of
Christ, to which he is now
returning. The meaning is, that
the believer’s hope lays hold on
God himself, on a throne of
grace and on Christ as the
High-Priest of the church, who
is in heaven itself, the place
of God’s presence, typified by
the holy of holies.
Verse 20
Hebrews 6:20. Whither the
forerunner — προδρομος, a
forerunner, is one who goes
before to do some service for
another who is to follow: in
which sense also the Latin word
ante-cursor is used. A
forerunner uses to be less in
dignity than those that are to
follow him: but it is not so
here; for Christ, who is gone
before us, is infinitely
superior to us; is for us
entered — Namely, for our good.
1st, To prepare a place for us,
John 14:2. 2d, To make continual
intercession for us. 3d, To make
us partakers of his own glory,
John 17:24; Revelation 3:21.
4th, To take possession of
heaven for us, John 14:3. What
an honour is it to believers to
have so glorious a forerunner
now appearing in the presence of
God for them! Made a High-Priest
for ever — Christ ascended to
heaven, 1st, To open it to us by
the sacrifice of himself, and to
plant our hope of eternal life
there as an anchor of the soul.
2d, Because having opened
heaven, he remains there as the
High-Priest of that holy place,
to introduce all believers into
the presence of God. This shows
in what sense Jesus is a
High-Priest for ever. He is so,
not by offering sacrifice for
ever in behalf of his people,
but by interceding for them
always, Romans 8:34; and by
introducing them into the
presence of God by the merit of
the one sacrifice of himself,
which he offered to God without
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